My process is the following:
Sometimes you will stumble upon attractive fares where adding a stopover does not change the price. Sometimes the price will be different but still better than a series of one-way fares or separate trips. And sometimes adding the stopover will make the ticket horribly expensive and you simply cannot visit this city on the cheap using this trick.
@Doc wrote a great answer explaining why that is and how it works behind the scenes but I am not aware of any tools or search engine that would search for good stopovers for you. Checking fare rules requires a paid tool and combing through hard-to-read text. Running a couple of additional searches can be faster and a powerful multi-city search tools like ITA Matrix will help you figure out what’s available and surface relevant fares for your destination.
Theoretically, it’s also entirely possible that a ticket with a stopover could be even cheaper than the original return fare so this approach could miss some good combos but I don’t think that’s common.
If it is an option for you to have four flights instead of three, you could buy two round-trip tickets, A-B-A and B-C-B (which makes the whole trip ( A -> (B -> C -> B) -> A )
.
Pros: easy to find two round-trip tickets.
Cons: splits the visit to B into two periods and adds one extra leg.
What you are looking for is a “stopover”.
Policies on stopovers are extremely variable. Some airlines, in cooperation with tourism boards of their home country, actually encourage stopovers in their home country/city (often with special deals on hotels or simplified formalities for visas).
That is (or was at some point) the case for Cathay Pacific in Hong Kong, Turkish Airlines in Istanbul, and at least one of the middle-eastern carriers (can’t remember which of Qatar Airlines, Emirates or Etihad), but there are probably many more.
Note that this is usually only valid for trips with a stop in their main hub, not in other locations.
Other airlines on the contrary will charge extra for stopovers and/or make it difficult to book stopovers.
If the website does not spontaneously suggest a stopover when you try to book a trip, the standard option is to use the “multi-city” option, which should try to find a matching round-trip fare allowing a stopover if one exists (otherwise it will indeed fall back to much less favourable fares).
If you want to find possible combinations (of airports, airlines and fares), you can use a tool like Expertflyer to list all fares from A to C and check the fare rules of each fare to see if stopovers are allowed, and if so, where, and at what cost.
You want to search for "multi-city" or "open-jaw" tickets. They can work out cheaper than individual one-way tickets but not always – see the answers to What are the "rules" for multi-city flights? for how they work.
Credit:stackoverflow.com‘
4 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024
5 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024
4 Mar, 2024